US20120003064A1 - Vacuum treatment apparatus - Google Patents
Vacuum treatment apparatus Download PDFInfo
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- US20120003064A1 US20120003064A1 US13/257,001 US201013257001A US2012003064A1 US 20120003064 A1 US20120003064 A1 US 20120003064A1 US 201013257001 A US201013257001 A US 201013257001A US 2012003064 A1 US2012003064 A1 US 2012003064A1
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- substrate
- load lock
- vacuum treatment
- axis
- recipient
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- 238000009489 vacuum treatment Methods 0.000 title claims description 67
- 239000000758 substrate Substances 0.000 claims abstract description 333
- 239000000969 carrier Substances 0.000 claims abstract description 75
- 238000011282 treatment Methods 0.000 claims description 55
- 238000012546 transfer Methods 0.000 claims description 4
- 238000004519 manufacturing process Methods 0.000 claims description 3
- 238000012545 processing Methods 0.000 description 23
- 238000000034 method Methods 0.000 description 5
- 238000004381 surface treatment Methods 0.000 description 5
- 238000000151 deposition Methods 0.000 description 4
- 238000011144 upstream manufacturing Methods 0.000 description 4
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- 238000012432 intermediate storage Methods 0.000 description 3
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- XUIMIQQOPSSXEZ-UHFFFAOYSA-N Silicon Chemical compound [Si] XUIMIQQOPSSXEZ-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 2
- 229910052681 coesite Inorganic materials 0.000 description 2
- 229910052906 cristobalite Inorganic materials 0.000 description 2
- 230000008021 deposition Effects 0.000 description 2
- 230000005484 gravity Effects 0.000 description 2
- 238000005240 physical vapour deposition Methods 0.000 description 2
- 238000000623 plasma-assisted chemical vapour deposition Methods 0.000 description 2
- 229910052710 silicon Inorganic materials 0.000 description 2
- 239000010703 silicon Substances 0.000 description 2
- 239000000377 silicon dioxide Substances 0.000 description 2
- 238000004544 sputter deposition Methods 0.000 description 2
- 229910052682 stishovite Inorganic materials 0.000 description 2
- 229910052905 tridymite Inorganic materials 0.000 description 2
- 238000013459 approach Methods 0.000 description 1
- 239000011248 coating agent Substances 0.000 description 1
- 238000000576 coating method Methods 0.000 description 1
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- 230000001419 dependent effect Effects 0.000 description 1
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Images
Classifications
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H01—ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
- H01L—SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
- H01L21/00—Processes or apparatus adapted for the manufacture or treatment of semiconductor or solid state devices or of parts thereof
- H01L21/67—Apparatus specially adapted for handling semiconductor or electric solid state devices during manufacture or treatment thereof; Apparatus specially adapted for handling wafers during manufacture or treatment of semiconductor or electric solid state devices or components ; Apparatus not specifically provided for elsewhere
- H01L21/677—Apparatus specially adapted for handling semiconductor or electric solid state devices during manufacture or treatment thereof; Apparatus specially adapted for handling wafers during manufacture or treatment of semiconductor or electric solid state devices or components ; Apparatus not specifically provided for elsewhere for conveying, e.g. between different workstations
- H01L21/67703—Apparatus specially adapted for handling semiconductor or electric solid state devices during manufacture or treatment thereof; Apparatus specially adapted for handling wafers during manufacture or treatment of semiconductor or electric solid state devices or components ; Apparatus not specifically provided for elsewhere for conveying, e.g. between different workstations between different workstations
- H01L21/67736—Loading to or unloading from a conveyor
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H01—ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
- H01L—SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
- H01L21/00—Processes or apparatus adapted for the manufacture or treatment of semiconductor or solid state devices or of parts thereof
- H01L21/67—Apparatus specially adapted for handling semiconductor or electric solid state devices during manufacture or treatment thereof; Apparatus specially adapted for handling wafers during manufacture or treatment of semiconductor or electric solid state devices or components ; Apparatus not specifically provided for elsewhere
- H01L21/67005—Apparatus not specifically provided for elsewhere
- H01L21/67011—Apparatus for manufacture or treatment
- H01L21/67155—Apparatus for manufacturing or treating in a plurality of work-stations
- H01L21/67201—Apparatus for manufacturing or treating in a plurality of work-stations characterized by the construction of the load-lock chamber
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H01—ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
- H01L—SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
- H01L21/00—Processes or apparatus adapted for the manufacture or treatment of semiconductor or solid state devices or of parts thereof
- H01L21/67—Apparatus specially adapted for handling semiconductor or electric solid state devices during manufacture or treatment thereof; Apparatus specially adapted for handling wafers during manufacture or treatment of semiconductor or electric solid state devices or components ; Apparatus not specifically provided for elsewhere
- H01L21/67005—Apparatus not specifically provided for elsewhere
- H01L21/67011—Apparatus for manufacture or treatment
- H01L21/67155—Apparatus for manufacturing or treating in a plurality of work-stations
- H01L21/67207—Apparatus for manufacturing or treating in a plurality of work-stations comprising a chamber adapted to a particular process
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H01—ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
- H01L—SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
- H01L21/00—Processes or apparatus adapted for the manufacture or treatment of semiconductor or solid state devices or of parts thereof
- H01L21/67—Apparatus specially adapted for handling semiconductor or electric solid state devices during manufacture or treatment thereof; Apparatus specially adapted for handling wafers during manufacture or treatment of semiconductor or electric solid state devices or components ; Apparatus not specifically provided for elsewhere
- H01L21/677—Apparatus specially adapted for handling semiconductor or electric solid state devices during manufacture or treatment thereof; Apparatus specially adapted for handling wafers during manufacture or treatment of semiconductor or electric solid state devices or components ; Apparatus not specifically provided for elsewhere for conveying, e.g. between different workstations
- H01L21/67739—Apparatus specially adapted for handling semiconductor or electric solid state devices during manufacture or treatment thereof; Apparatus specially adapted for handling wafers during manufacture or treatment of semiconductor or electric solid state devices or components ; Apparatus not specifically provided for elsewhere for conveying, e.g. between different workstations into and out of processing chamber
- H01L21/67742—Mechanical parts of transfer devices
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H01—ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
- H01L—SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
- H01L21/00—Processes or apparatus adapted for the manufacture or treatment of semiconductor or solid state devices or of parts thereof
- H01L21/67—Apparatus specially adapted for handling semiconductor or electric solid state devices during manufacture or treatment thereof; Apparatus specially adapted for handling wafers during manufacture or treatment of semiconductor or electric solid state devices or components ; Apparatus not specifically provided for elsewhere
- H01L21/677—Apparatus specially adapted for handling semiconductor or electric solid state devices during manufacture or treatment thereof; Apparatus specially adapted for handling wafers during manufacture or treatment of semiconductor or electric solid state devices or components ; Apparatus not specifically provided for elsewhere for conveying, e.g. between different workstations
- H01L21/67739—Apparatus specially adapted for handling semiconductor or electric solid state devices during manufacture or treatment thereof; Apparatus specially adapted for handling wafers during manufacture or treatment of semiconductor or electric solid state devices or components ; Apparatus not specifically provided for elsewhere for conveying, e.g. between different workstations into and out of processing chamber
- H01L21/67748—Apparatus specially adapted for handling semiconductor or electric solid state devices during manufacture or treatment thereof; Apparatus specially adapted for handling wafers during manufacture or treatment of semiconductor or electric solid state devices or components ; Apparatus not specifically provided for elsewhere for conveying, e.g. between different workstations into and out of processing chamber horizontal transfer of a single workpiece
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H01—ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
- H01L—SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
- H01L21/00—Processes or apparatus adapted for the manufacture or treatment of semiconductor or solid state devices or of parts thereof
- H01L21/67—Apparatus specially adapted for handling semiconductor or electric solid state devices during manufacture or treatment thereof; Apparatus specially adapted for handling wafers during manufacture or treatment of semiconductor or electric solid state devices or components ; Apparatus not specifically provided for elsewhere
- H01L21/677—Apparatus specially adapted for handling semiconductor or electric solid state devices during manufacture or treatment thereof; Apparatus specially adapted for handling wafers during manufacture or treatment of semiconductor or electric solid state devices or components ; Apparatus not specifically provided for elsewhere for conveying, e.g. between different workstations
- H01L21/67739—Apparatus specially adapted for handling semiconductor or electric solid state devices during manufacture or treatment thereof; Apparatus specially adapted for handling wafers during manufacture or treatment of semiconductor or electric solid state devices or components ; Apparatus not specifically provided for elsewhere for conveying, e.g. between different workstations into and out of processing chamber
- H01L21/67751—Apparatus specially adapted for handling semiconductor or electric solid state devices during manufacture or treatment thereof; Apparatus specially adapted for handling wafers during manufacture or treatment of semiconductor or electric solid state devices or components ; Apparatus not specifically provided for elsewhere for conveying, e.g. between different workstations into and out of processing chamber vertical transfer of a single workpiece
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- Y—GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
- Y10—TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
- Y10S—TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
- Y10S414/00—Material or article handling
- Y10S414/135—Associated with semiconductor wafer handling
- Y10S414/139—Associated with semiconductor wafer handling including wafer charging or discharging means for vacuum chamber
Definitions
- the present invention is directed on a vacuum treatment apparatus for single substrate treatment.
- the criteria For vacuum treatment apparatus operating in single substrate treatment mode, in opposition to batch treatment mode, the criteria
- the vacuum treatment apparatus which comprises a vacuum treatment recipient.
- the vacuum treatment recipient comprises a load lock between an inside of the recipient and exterior of the recipient which is customarily ambient.
- the load lock comprises an external valve arrangement which operates between a compartment of the load lock and the exterior of the treatment recipient.
- the load lock further comprises an internal valve arrangement which operates between the compartment of the load lock and the remainder of the inside of vacuum treatment recipient.
- the load lock is conceived as a bi-directional load lock for substrate transfer between the interior and the exterior of the vacuum treatment recipient.
- the vacuum treatment apparatus further comprises a transport arrangement which is located in the exterior for bi-directionally transporting substrates towards and from the load lock.
- the addressed transport arrangement comprises
- the first and the second substrate carrier are mutually aligned respectively in one specific position of their respective swiveling trajectory paths. As one of the first substrate carriers is aligned with one of the second substrate carriers, the other one of the first substrate carriers is aligned with the load lock.
- the first substrate carriers are further moveable towards and from the vacuum treatment recipient, once one of these substrate carriers is aligned with the load lock. They are moveable as addressed by respective third controlled drives and thereby form, respectively, the external valve of the load lock.
- the load lock has a serving opening for substrates towards the exterior of the vacuum recipient, which is located in a top side wall portion of the vacuum treatment recipient. This allows within the vacuum recipient, to have the substrate just deposited on any type of substrate carrier ability. Only the first substrate handler with a minimal number of substrate carriers has to be tailored to hold the substrates in suspended position, necessitating active substrate retention abilities.
- the first substrate handler has just two of the first substrate carriers which are located opposite each other with respect to the first axis, i.e. the swiveling axis of the first substrate handler. This allows to swivelably control the first handler for serving on one hand the load lock, on the other hand the second substrate handler in equal angular swiveling steps.
- the second substrate handler comprises just four of the second substrate carriers arranged pairwise opposite each other with respect to the second axis, i.e. the swiveling axis of the second substrate handler.
- the second substrate handler provides for the necessary intermediate storage location for an untreated and a treated substrate to allow bi-directional transport ability of the transport arrangement, but, on the other hand, minimizes the footprint area without reducing throughput.
- the first and second axes as well as the direction of moveability of the first substrate carriers towards and from the vacuum treatment recipient, i.e. the moveability for load lock valve action of the first substrate carriers, are parallel.
- this embodiment leads to a highly efficient and compact overall construction wherein transfer of substrates between the handlers one hand and between the first handler and the load lock, finally the vacuum treatment recipient, may be performed with minimal expenditures. Only a minimal number of the substrate carriers needs to be tailored for suspendingly holding substrates, whereas the remaining substrate carriers may just support the substrate deposited thereon. Only fixation of the substrates on the latter substrate carriers with respect to centrifugal forces must be provided in view of the high velocity swiveling of the respective substrate handlers.
- the vacuum treatment recipient comprises at least two mounting locations for a treatment station each.
- two treatment stations may be mounted to the vacuum treatment recipient besides of the load lock addressed before.
- Each of the treatment stations is conceived for treating a single substrate.
- the vacuum treatment recipient further comprises a further transport arrangement which is swivelable about a third axis by means of a controlled third drive.
- the further transport arrangement comprises at least three substrate supports equally spaced from the swiveling axis of the further transport arrangement.
- the at least three substrate supports are in fact arranged along a circular locus about the addressed third axis.
- the substrate supports are further evenly distributed in azimutal direction with respect to the swiveling axis of the further transport arrangement, which means that radial loci between the addressed axis and the respective substrate supports define for equal angles, in the minimal configuration of 120°.
- Step timing control of the further transport arrangement and thus of overall substrate processing governs the swivel step control of the first and second substrate handlers.
- processing steps with longer processing durations are split in sub-process steps, each performed at one of the treatment stations.
- substrate processing necessitates a processing time which accords with three time the time span one substrate is exposed to one treatment station in the vacuum recipient, then all the treatment stations provided are selected be equal and to be operated equally.
- the third axis which is the swiveling axis of the further transport arrangement is parallel to the first axis, i.e. the swiveling axis of the first substrate handler.
- a one-directional conveyor which interacts with respect to substrate transport with the second substrate handler.
- the transport arrangement of the apparatus according to the invention is a bi-directional transport arrangement, it might be seen that it is possible to unload an untreated substrate from the one-directional conveyor and to replace it there by an already treated substrate. Thereby, a highly efficient inline treatment of substrates becomes possible, wherein the substrates which are transported one-directionally become treated and are treated downstream a position of substrate transfere between the one-directional conveyor and the transport arrangement handlers.
- the one-directional conveyor interacts with the second substrate handler by means of a third substrate handler. This allows establishing substrate support on the one-directional conveyor so that there no active substrate holder arrangements are necessary as would be necessary if the substrates were to be held in suspended position at the addressed conveyor.
- an enlarged vacuum treatment apparatus which comprises at least two of the vacuum treatment apparatus and wherein the addressed one-directional conveyor for each of the addressed vacuum treatment apparatus is realized by a single one-directional conveyor.
- a flip station is provided between two of the vacuum treatment apparatus arranged along the one-directional conveyor, wherein the substrates treated by a first of the addressed apparatus are turned upside down, allowing the other side of the substrates to be treated in the second, downstream apparatus, thus overall allowing double-sided substrate treatment.
- the apparatus or enlarged apparatus according to the invention is especially suited for treating substrates of at least 200 mm ⁇ 200 mm and is further especially suited for high throughput manufacturing of solar cells.
- FIG. 1 most schematically in a perspective representation, an apparatus according to the present invention
- FIG. 2 schematically, an apparatus according to FIG. 1 in top view for explaining by means of FIG. 2 b - FIG. 2 f a step-by-step control of the transport arrangement of the apparatus according to FIG. 1 ;
- FIG. 3 in top view, an embodiment of the apparatus according to the present invention incorporating therein the apparatus as exemplified with the help of FIGS. 1 and 2 ;
- FIG. 4 a part of the apparatus according to FIG. 3 in cross-sectional representation
- FIG. 5 an enlarged apparatus according to the present invention in one embodiment, making use of two of the apparatuses as shown in the FIGS. 3 and 4 ;
- FIG. 6 in a representation in analogy to that of FIG. 5 , a further embodiment of an enlarged treatment apparatus
- FIG. 7 in a perspective view, an apparatus according to the present invention and similar to the apparatus according to the FIGS. 3 and 4 for cassette-to-cassette substrate handling, and
- FIGS. 8 a - 8 c a schematic representation of an apparatus according to the present invention for different substrate treatments and accordingly with different treatment station configurations.
- FIG. 1 an apparatus according to the present invention is perspectively shown, most schematically and under a generic approach.
- Substrates (not shown in FIG. 1 ) are treated by one or more than one vacuum treatment processes within a vacuum recipient 10 which is evacuatable by means of a vacuum pump arrangement 3 .
- the vacuum recipient 10 has an interior volume i and is surrounded by its exterior e which is e.g. ambient atmosphere.
- the vacuum recipient 10 has a pass-through opening in its top wall 8 for substrates.
- the pass-through opening is conceived as a bi-directional load lock 5 having an external valve plate 1 a, an internal valve (not shown in the representation of FIG. 1 ) as clearly known to the skilled artisan and a load lock compartment 5 a.
- the external valve plate 1 a is realized by a substrate carrier 1 a which is provided on a first substrate handler 1 of a transport arrangement 100 provided in the exterior e of the vacuum treatment recipient 10 .
- the first substrate handler 1 is swivelable about a first axis A 1 , whereby the swiveling movement is driven by a first drive 9 which is controllable at a control input C 9 .
- the first substrate handler 1 comprises two first substrate carriers 1 a and 1 b which are mounted on the addressed handler radially opposite to each others with respect to the first axis A 1 and equally spaced from this first axis A 1 .
- first substrate handler 1 is controllably swiveled about axis A 1 , selectively one of the at least two first substrate carriers 1 a and 1 b becomes positioned in registry with the compartment 5 a of load lock 5 , as shown in FIG. 1 the one first substrate carrier 1 a .
- Each of the at least two first substrate carriers 1 a and 1 b may be moved towards the vacuum treatment recipient 10 and thus towards compartment 5 a of load lock 5 to seal off the addressed compartment with respect to the exterior e and thus to operate as the external valve of the load lock 5 .
- the opening of load lock 5 towards the exterior e is in plane with the plane wherealong the first substrate carrier 1 swivels
- the first substrate carriers 1 a and 1 b as of FIG. 1 are moveable towards and from such opening in a direction parallel to first axis A 1 , driven by control drives 11 a and 11 b , both being controlled via respective control inputs C 11a and C 11b .
- the transport arrangement 100 further comprises a second substrate handler 20 which is swivelable about a second axis A 20 by means of a second controlled drive 21 controlled at a control input C 21 .
- the second substrate handler 20 comprises at least four second substrate carriers 20 a to 20 d .
- the second substrate carriers 20 a to 20 d are evenly distributed in azimutal direction ⁇ with respect to the second axis A 20 about this axis A 20 and are equally spaced therefrom.
- the second axis A 20 is parallel to the first axis A 10 which generically is not mandatory.
- first substrate carriers 1 a and 1 b and the second substrate carriers 20 a to 20 d are mutually aligned respectively in one position P 1/20 , in the embodiment of FIG. 1 considered in direction of the axis A 1 and A 20 .
- first carrier 1 a is in alignment with the load lock 5 and establishes there for the external valve of the load lock 5 .
- the first and the second substrate carriers 1 a, 1 b; 20 a - 20 d are respectively equipped (not shown in FIG. 1 ) with substrate seizing or gripping and releasing arrangements, which arrangements are controlled if necessary.
- a substrate may be seized from a support or released to a support.
- the apparatus as generically shown in FIG. 1 further comprises a timing unit 25 by which all the controlled drives 11 a, 11 b, 9 and 21 as well as the (not shown) substrate seizing and releasing units at the first and/or second substrate carriers are time controlled.
- the load lock 5 of the vacuum recipient 10 is conceived as a bi-directional load lock, which means substrates are transferred from the exterior e to the interior i of the vacuum treatment recipient 10 as well as vice versa from the interior i to the exterior e via load lock 5 .
- the transport arrangement 100 is operated by respective time sequence control of the addressed drives and seizing/releasing units as a bi-directional transport arrangement for substrates which are to be treated towards and into the vacuum recipient 10 as well as for substrates which have been treated in vacuum recipient 10 towards a desired destination, generically shown at 7 .
- FIGS. 2 a to 2 f a step sequence of substrate handling by the apparatus according to FIG. 1 is shown.
- the apparatus which is shown perspectively in FIG. 1 is schematically shown in FIG. 2 a in top view, whereby the substrate carriers exemplified in FIG. 1 in square shape are shown in FIG. 2 a in circular shape.
- substrates UT not yet treated in vacuum recipient 10 are addressed by one type of hatching according (UT) and substrates T having been treated in vacuum recipient 10 are denoted by the other type of hatching (T).
- FIG. 2 a shows the respective swiveling directions which are assumed for the following step-by-step discussion.
- Substrate carrier 20 d has been loaded with an untreated substrate from source location 7 .
- Substrate carrier (SC) 20 a is loaded with an untreated substrate.
- SC 20 b has unloaded an untreated substrate to SC 1 b.
- SC 1 a has been loaded with a treated substrate from load lock 5 .
- SC 20 c is still loaded with a treated substrate.
- the first substrate handler 1 In transiting from the FIG. 2 b to the FIG. 2 c representation the first substrate handler 1 is swiveled by 180°, whereas the second substrate handler 20 is kept stationary. SC 1 b has unloaded the untreated substrate to load lock 5 . The treated substrate on SC 1 a has been unloaded to SC 20 b. Untreated substrates still remain on SC 20 d and SC 20 a, whereas SC 20 c is still loaded with a treated substrate.
- the first substrate handler 1 When transiting from the configuration according to FIG. 2 c to the configuration according to FIG. 2 d the first substrate handler 1 is kept stationary, whereas the second substrate handler 20 is swiveled by 90°.
- SC 1 b is loaded from load lock 5 by a treated substrate.
- SC 1 a is loaded with an untreated substrate from SC 20 a.
- SC 20 c has unloaded a treated substrate to destination location 7 .
- SC 20 d is still loaded with an untreated substrate, whereas SC 20 b is still loaded with a treated substrate.
- the first substrate handler 1 is swiveled by 180°, whereas the second substrate handler 20 is kept stationary.
- SC 1 a has unloaded the untreated substrate to load lock 5 .
- SC 1 b has unloaded a treated substrate to SC 20 a.
- SC 20 c has been loaded by an untreated substrate from source destination 7 .
- SC 20 d is still loaded with an untreated substrate, whereas SC 20 b is still loaded with a treated substrate.
- the first substrate handler 1 When transiting from the configuration of FIG. 2 e to the configuration of FIG. 2 f the first substrate handler 1 is kept stationary, whereas the second substrate handler 20 is swiveled by 90°.
- SC 1 a is loaded from load lock 5 with a treated substrate.
- SC 1 b is loaded from SC 20 d with an untreated substrate.
- SC 20 b has unloaded a treated substrate to source destination 7 .
- SC 20 c is still loaded with an untreated, whereas SC 20 a is still loaded with a treated substrate.
- FIG. 2 c and FIG. 2 e on one hand and of FIG. 2 d and FIG. 2 f on the other hand are identical.
- one treated substrate is transferred from vacuum treatment recipient 10 to the transport arrangement 100 and one untreated substrate is delivered from the transport arrangement 100 to the vacuum treatment recipient 10 .
- one untreated substrate is picked up from a source station 7 and one treated substrate is delivered to reception station 7 .
- the principle as exemplified is not necessarily bound to the substrates being delivered to and retrieved from a vacuum recipient at its top side and by respective vertical movement of the first substrate carriers 1 a or 1 b, simultaneously acting as the exterior valve of the bi-directional load lock 5 .
- the swivel axes A 1 and A 20 need not necessarily be vertical and need not necessarily be in parallelism, and further it becomes evident that with respect to the location of the vacuum treatment recipient 10 the two substrate handlers 1 and 20 might be arranged in inverse sequence.
- the handler 20 which in fact provides for an intermediate storage location both for an untreated and for a treated substrate might be realized with more than four substrate carriers and that the first handler 1 as well might be realized with more than two first substrate carriers. Further, under a generic aspect it is further not mandatory that, considered in azimutal direction ⁇ in FIG. 1 , the substrate carriers as provided at both substrate handlers 1 and 20 are equally distributed. They might be distributed unevenly, which would only necessitate respective control of differently sized swiveling steps.
- FIG. 1 is in fact highly optimized with respect to easy substrate handling, high throughput and small footprint.
- FIG. 3 shows in top view and simplified a today preferred vacuum treatment apparatus according to the invention, wherein the transport arrangement 100 in cooperation with a vacuum treatment recipient 10 as shown in FIG. 1 are exploited.
- FIG. 4 shows a cross-sectional representation along line IV-IV of FIG. 3 , without handler 20 .
- a transport arrangement 30 which is swivelable about a central axis A 30 .
- the transport arrangement 30 is driven for its swivel movement by a drive 32 with a control input C 32 .
- the transport arrangement 30 carries along its periphery six substrate carriers 34 for substrates 36 .
- the vacuum treatment recipient 10 there are provided six stations, five of which, 38 a to 38 e, being surface treatment stations for the substrates 36 , one thereof being the bi-directional load lock station 35 in analogy to load lock 5 of FIG. 1 .
- the surface treatment stations 38 a to 38 e may all be realized for different substrate processings or a number of these treatments stations may be conceived for equal surface processing and even all of these stations may be conceived for equal substrate surface processing.
- Such treatment stations may be stations for PVD surface treatment, e.g. sputtering stations for reactive or non-reactive sputtering, thereby especially magnetron sputtering, may be stations for arc evaporation coating, again reactive or non-reactive, may further be treatment stations for CVD, thereby especially for plasma-enhanced CVD, may further be etching stations, heating or cooling stations, etc.
- the respective substrate carriers 34 reside within inner valve members, one thereof, 40 c , being shown in FIG. 4 .
- inner valve members one thereof, 40 c , being shown in FIG. 4 .
- cylinder/piston arrangements mounted to the bottom wall 42 of the vacuum treatment recipient 10 , cylinder/piston arrangements, respectively 44 a to 44 e and 44 35 .
- the substrate carriers 34 and the valve members 40 may be lifted and retracted independently.
- the substrate carrier 34 may be lifted into treatment position for substrate 36 within treatment station 38 c .
- the processing space within the treatment station 38 c is sealed from the remaining interior i of the vacuum treatment recipient 10 by means of lifting the valve member 40 c towards and onto wall 48 of the vacuum treatment recipient 10 .
- a controlled rotary drive 46 c by means of which, once the respective substrate carrier 34 is brought into registering position with a treatment station 38 , the substrate carrier 34 is rotated in its treatment position e.g. to establish uniform treatment along the surface of the substrate.
- the transport arrangement 30 is stepwise rotated by respective angular steps ⁇ as shown in FIG. 3 so that after each angular swiveling step one of the valve member 40 and substrate carriers 34 is in registering position with one of the treatment stations 38 and load lock 35 . Then in the registering positions, seal-off of the treatment or processing atmosphere from the inside i of the vacuum treatment recipient 10 is established by lifting the valve member 40 towards and onto the inner surface of the top wall 48 of the vacuum treatment recipient 10 , thereby the substrate carriers 34 are lifted in respective processing positions within the treatment stations 38 . Lifting of the substrate carriers 34 on one hand and of valve members 40 on the other hand is performed substantially simultaneously at each of the treatment stations.
- That valve member 40 which registers with the load lock 35 acts as the inside load lock valve.
- the substrate handler 1 with swiveling drive 9 is conceived as was explained in context with FIG. 1 .
- the drives 11 a and 11 b as shown in FIG. 1 are realized by respective cylinder/piston drives 11 a′ and 11 b′ .
- a load lock vacuum pump 48 is operationally connected to the load lock compartment of the load lock 35 .
- the second substrate handler 20 is conceived as was exemplified more schematically in the FIGS. 1 to 2 f.
- step forwards movement of the transport arrangement 30 and occurrence of 180° swiveling steps of the first substrate handler 1 are in synchronism, but phase shifted by half a step repetition period.
- the step control clock for the transport arrangement 30 which depends from the respective processing durations at the treatment stations 38 , governs the swiveling clock for handler 1 .
- an equal duration is established which accords with the duration which is necessitated to remove a treated substrate from the transport arrangement 30 onto one of the substrate carriers 1 a or 1 b of first substrate handler 1 and additionally to apply from the respective substrate carrier 1 b or 1 a of handler 1 a yet untreated substrate via the load lock 35 to the substrate transport arrangement 30 .
- FIG. 3 there is further provided a third substrate handler 50 in a specific embodiment of the apparatus according to the invention.
- This third substrate handler 50 again with an eye on FIGS. 2 b to 2 f , operates as source and destination location 7 .
- the handler 50 is operated at the same step-controlling clock as the first substrate handler 1 .
- Third substrate handler 50 thus removes from a respective one of the substrate carriers 20 a treated substrate and applies to the same an untreated substrate.
- the third substrate handler 50 is swiveled about an axis A 50 , preferably arranged parallel to the axes A 1 , A 20 , A 30 and is conceived as a two-arm handler in analogy to the substrate handler 1 .
- the controlled swiveling drive for the third substrate handler 50 is addressed by reference number 52 in FIG. 3 with control input C 52 .
- a one-directional conveyor arrangement 54 with inline substrate support areas 56 is provided.
- the one-directional conveyor 54 is stepwise moved forwards as shown by the arrow v, so that whenever a substrate carrier 50 a or 50 b of the third substrate handler 50 registers with one of the substrate carriers 20 a to 20 c of the second substrate handler 20 , the other one of the two substrate carriers 50 a, 50 b registers with one of the substrate supports 56 upon the conveyor 54 .
- an untreated substrate arriving from E in on a substrate support 56 is gripped by one of the substrate carriers 50 a or 50 b and subsequently, after a 180° swiveling step of the third substrate handler 50 , a treated substrate is released and placed on the substrate support 56 which has just been freed.
- the treated substrate is moved in synchronism with transport arrangement 30 .
- the substrate carriers 50 a and 50 b of the third substrate handler 50 are equipped with substrate gripping members as at these substrate carriers the substrates are to be held in suspended position.
- the apparatus as shown especially in FIG. 3 possibly with different types of third substrate handler 50 as will be addressed later, allows utmost flexible conception for more complex substrate treatment apparatus.
- first apparatus 60 a according to the embodiment of FIG. 3 is provided along the one-directional conveyor 54 .
- the front surface of the substrates is treated by five equal or different processing or treatment steps.
- the substrates are re-deposited by the third substrate handler 50 on the conveyor 54 they are stepwise moved forwards towards a flip station 58 .
- the substrates are flipped so that their yet untreated surface is pointing upwards.
- the flipped-over substrates are then transported to a second apparatus 60 b conceived as was explained in context with FIG. 3 . There the backside of the substrates is treated.
- backside treatment may e.g. necessitate only one surface treatment or processing step at the apparatus 60 b and as shown by respective hatching, only one of the treatment stations is operative or only one of such treatment stations is at all mounted.
- the substrates with surface treated backside are re-deposited upon the conveyor 54 , so that downstream apparatus 60 b substrates are stepwise transported which are treated on both, front surface and back surface.
- one and the same surface of the substrate may be treated by totally ten processing steps, namely of apparatus 60 a plus of apparatus 60 b without providing the flipping station 58 .
- FIG. 6 shows a further example of flexibly combining apparatus according to the present invention to more complex multi-apparatus arrangements.
- parallel processing of substrates is established, which leads to doubling the throughput at the output end E out of conveyor 54 .
- a first apparatus 60 c according to the invention every second workpiece support 56 of conveyor 54 is emptied from an untreated substrate, and a treated substrate is re-applied to the yet emptied workpiece support 56 .
- the conveyor 54 is stepwise advanced by an extent according to two subsequent substrate supports 56 , each time an untreated substrate has been replaced by a substrate having been treated in apparatus 60 c .
- Upstream a second apparatus 60 d identical to apparatus 60 c is provided along the conveyor 54 .
- the spacing of the two apparatus 60 c and 60 d is established so that the second apparatus 60 d with its third substrate handler 50 d registers with an untreated substrate on the conveyor 54 when the first apparatus 60 c with its third substrate handler 50 c registers as well with an untreated substrate on the conveyor 54 .
- the apparatus 60 d is thus loaded in parallel to the apparatus 60 c with an untreated substrate from the substrate carrier 54 and respectively re-applies a treated substrate back to the just freed substrate support 56 simultaneously with apparatus 60 c doing so.
- the conveyor 54 is advanced at double speed the output of treated substrates at E out is doubled due to the addressed parallel processing.
- substrate handling is performed in a cassette-to-cassette technique.
- FIG. 7 there is provided instead of a single-substrate transport conveyor 54 a cassette-transport conveyor 54 a wherein instead of single wafer supports 56 cassette or magazine supports 56 a are provided.
- Full cassettes with untreated substrates are fed in arrow direction stepwise towards unload position P ul .
- the cassette with untreated substrates is unloaded by means of a pivot robot 58 onto the second substrate handler 20 and treated substrates are unloaded from the second substrate handler 20 and loaded in a next upstream cassette by handler 58 .
- Stepwise forwards movement of the conveyor 54 a is only performed after that a cassette with untreated substrates is emptied and, accordingly, the next upstream cassette is full with the respective number of treated substrates.
- cassette-to-cassette handling might also be performed with an eye e.g. on FIG. 3 by means of a two-armed handler 50 , thereby moving the conveyor 54 a with cassettes forth and back to subsequently empty one cassette with untreated substrates and filling the upstream neighboring cassette with treated substrates.
- the apparatus according to the present invention is especially tailored today to treat substrates as silicon wafers for solar cell production. Thereby and with an eye e.g. on FIG. 5 for depositing a layer which has triple thickness of subsequent layers, three subsequent treating stations are operated equally and such triple thickness layer is deposited in fact by subsequently depositing one third of the layer in three equally operated subsequent treating stations.
- substrate surface treatment may be performed highly flexibly, whereby all the treatment steps are subdivided in sub-processes of equal time duration.
- the addressed apparatus has a minimum footprint at optimized throughput. It has to be noted that all handling facilities are easily accessible from outside the vacuum treatment recipient, obviously with the exception of the transport arrangement 30 within such recipient. Substrates e.g.
- a thick layer of SiN:H may be deposited on silicon wafers by performing six times the equal layer deposition, e.g. by plasma-enhanced CVD or reactive PVD (sputtering).
- a relatively thin layer of SiN:H is deposited and upon such relatively thin layer a further layer of SiN with approximately five times the thickness of the SiN:H layer.
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Abstract
Description
- The present invention is directed on a vacuum treatment apparatus for single substrate treatment. For vacuum treatment apparatus operating in single substrate treatment mode, in opposition to batch treatment mode, the criteria
-
- footprint of the apparatus
- throughput by the apparatus
- accessibility to subsets of the apparatus from ambient atmosphere
- coupled with the last mentioned criterion, time intervals during which the apparatus is unproductive e.g. for maintenance and replacement works are of utmost importance.
- It is an object of the present invention to provide a vacuum treatment apparatus which is optimized for the above mentioned criteria.
- This is achieved by the vacuum treatment apparatus which comprises a vacuum treatment recipient. The vacuum treatment recipient comprises a load lock between an inside of the recipient and exterior of the recipient which is customarily ambient. The load lock comprises an external valve arrangement which operates between a compartment of the load lock and the exterior of the treatment recipient. The load lock further comprises an internal valve arrangement which operates between the compartment of the load lock and the remainder of the inside of vacuum treatment recipient. The load lock is conceived as a bi-directional load lock for substrate transfer between the interior and the exterior of the vacuum treatment recipient.
- The vacuum treatment apparatus according to the invention further comprises a transport arrangement which is located in the exterior for bi-directionally transporting substrates towards and from the load lock. The addressed transport arrangement comprises
-
- a first substrate handler which is swivelable about a first axis by means of a controlled first drive and which comprises at least two first substrate carriers equally spaced from the addressed first axis,
- a second substrate handler which swivelable about a second axis by means of a second controlled drive and which comprises at least four second substrate carriers which are equally spaced from the second axis.
- The first and the second substrate carrier are mutually aligned respectively in one specific position of their respective swiveling trajectory paths. As one of the first substrate carriers is aligned with one of the second substrate carriers, the other one of the first substrate carriers is aligned with the load lock. The first substrate carriers are further moveable towards and from the vacuum treatment recipient, once one of these substrate carriers is aligned with the load lock. They are moveable as addressed by respective third controlled drives and thereby form, respectively, the external valve of the load lock.
- By this addressed transport arrangement there is realized a bi-directional transport ability, by which untreated substrates may be conveyed from a source location towards and into the vacuum treatment recipient as well as, vice versa, treated substrates from the vacuum treatment recipient towards and onto a destination location. Thereby, due to the combination of these bi-directional transport abilities towards and from the vacuum treatment recipient, considerable footprint area is saved. In spite of this combination of forwards and backwards trajectory paths for the substrates with respect to the load lock in the vacuum treatment recipient a high transport capacity and thus throughput is realized. Additionally, all the transport arrangement is built in the exterior area with respect to the vacuum treatment recipient, which allows easy accessibility.
- In one embodiment of the apparatus according to the present invention the load lock has a serving opening for substrates towards the exterior of the vacuum recipient, which is located in a top side wall portion of the vacuum treatment recipient. This allows within the vacuum recipient, to have the substrate just deposited on any type of substrate carrier ability. Only the first substrate handler with a minimal number of substrate carriers has to be tailored to hold the substrates in suspended position, necessitating active substrate retention abilities.
- In a further embodiment of the apparatus according to the invention the first substrate handler has just two of the first substrate carriers which are located opposite each other with respect to the first axis, i.e. the swiveling axis of the first substrate handler. This allows to swivelably control the first handler for serving on one hand the load lock, on the other hand the second substrate handler in equal angular swiveling steps.
- Still in a further embodiment of the apparatus according to the invention which may be combined with any of the already and subsequently addressed embodiments of such apparatus the second substrate handler comprises just four of the second substrate carriers arranged pairwise opposite each other with respect to the second axis, i.e. the swiveling axis of the second substrate handler. Thereby, the second substrate handler provides for the necessary intermediate storage location for an untreated and a treated substrate to allow bi-directional transport ability of the transport arrangement, but, on the other hand, minimizes the footprint area without reducing throughput.
- In a further embodiment of the apparatus according to the invention, which may be combined with any of the already and subsequently addressed embodiments, the first and second axes as well as the direction of moveability of the first substrate carriers towards and from the vacuum treatment recipient, i.e. the moveability for load lock valve action of the first substrate carriers, are parallel. Especially in combination with the specific location of the serving opening of the load lock this embodiment leads to a highly efficient and compact overall construction wherein transfer of substrates between the handlers one hand and between the first handler and the load lock, finally the vacuum treatment recipient, may be performed with minimal expenditures. Only a minimal number of the substrate carriers needs to be tailored for suspendingly holding substrates, whereas the remaining substrate carriers may just support the substrate deposited thereon. Only fixation of the substrates on the latter substrate carriers with respect to centrifugal forces must be provided in view of the high velocity swiveling of the respective substrate handlers.
- In a further embodiment of the apparatus according to the invention which again may be combined with any of the already and subsequently addressed embodiments the vacuum treatment recipient comprises at least two mounting locations for a treatment station each. Thus, in minimal configuration two treatment stations may be mounted to the vacuum treatment recipient besides of the load lock addressed before. Each of the treatment stations is conceived for treating a single substrate. The vacuum treatment recipient further comprises a further transport arrangement which is swivelable about a third axis by means of a controlled third drive. The further transport arrangement comprises at least three substrate supports equally spaced from the swiveling axis of the further transport arrangement. Thus, the at least three substrate supports are in fact arranged along a circular locus about the addressed third axis. The substrate supports are further evenly distributed in azimutal direction with respect to the swiveling axis of the further transport arrangement, which means that radial loci between the addressed axis and the respective substrate supports define for equal angles, in the minimal configuration of 120°.
- By providing the addressed vacuum treatment recipient with the one bi-directional load lock, substrates are input through the load lock, transported subsequently to all mounting locations for a treatment station and finally unloaded from the recipient towards the transport arrangement stepwise. Step timing control of the further transport arrangement and thus of overall substrate processing governs the swivel step control of the first and second substrate handlers. As all the treatment steps by treatment stations mounted to the addressed mounting location are of equal duration, processing steps with longer processing durations are split in sub-process steps, each performed at one of the treatment stations. E.g. in one extreme, if substrate processing necessitates a processing time which accords with three time the time span one substrate is exposed to one treatment station in the vacuum recipient, then all the treatment stations provided are selected be equal and to be operated equally.
- Thus, by the addressed embodiment a high processing flexibility is reached, nevertheless ensuring a minimal footprint for the overall apparatus and high throughput.
- In a variant of the just addressed embodiment the third axis which is the swiveling axis of the further transport arrangement is parallel to the first axis, i.e. the swiveling axis of the first substrate handler.
- Still in a further embodiment of the apparatus according to the invention, which may be combined with any of the already and subsequently addressed embodiments and variants, there is provided a one-directional conveyor which interacts with respect to substrate transport with the second substrate handler. Taking into account that the transport arrangement of the apparatus according to the invention is a bi-directional transport arrangement, it might be seen that it is possible to unload an untreated substrate from the one-directional conveyor and to replace it there by an already treated substrate. Thereby, a highly efficient inline treatment of substrates becomes possible, wherein the substrates which are transported one-directionally become treated and are treated downstream a position of substrate transfere between the one-directional conveyor and the transport arrangement handlers.
- In one variant of the embodiment as just addressed the one-directional conveyor interacts with the second substrate handler by means of a third substrate handler. This allows establishing substrate support on the one-directional conveyor so that there no active substrate holder arrangements are necessary as would be necessary if the substrates were to be held in suspended position at the addressed conveyor.
- According to the present invention there is further provided an enlarged vacuum treatment apparatus which comprises at least two of the vacuum treatment apparatus and wherein the addressed one-directional conveyor for each of the addressed vacuum treatment apparatus is realized by a single one-directional conveyor. Thereby and due to the more than one of the addressed vacuum treatment apparatus along the one-directional conveyor processing flexibility is even largely improved. On one hand the number of overall treatment stations is risen generically and it becomes possible by equally treating substrates at both the addressed apparatus to perform parallel processing and thereby to significantly increase throughput.
- In one variant of the just addressed enlarged vacuum treatment apparatus according to the invention a flip station is provided between two of the vacuum treatment apparatus arranged along the one-directional conveyor, wherein the substrates treated by a first of the addressed apparatus are turned upside down, allowing the other side of the substrates to be treated in the second, downstream apparatus, thus overall allowing double-sided substrate treatment.
- The apparatus or enlarged apparatus according to the invention is especially suited for treating substrates of at least 200 mm×200 mm and is further especially suited for high throughput manufacturing of solar cells.
- The invention shall now be further explained by means of examples and with the help of figures. The figures show:
-
FIG. 1 most schematically in a perspective representation, an apparatus according to the present invention; -
FIG. 2 schematically, an apparatus according toFIG. 1 in top view for explaining by means ofFIG. 2 b-FIG. 2 f a step-by-step control of the transport arrangement of the apparatus according toFIG. 1 ; -
FIG. 3 in top view, an embodiment of the apparatus according to the present invention incorporating therein the apparatus as exemplified with the help ofFIGS. 1 and 2 ; -
FIG. 4 a part of the apparatus according toFIG. 3 in cross-sectional representation; -
FIG. 5 an enlarged apparatus according to the present invention in one embodiment, making use of two of the apparatuses as shown in theFIGS. 3 and 4 ; -
FIG. 6 in a representation in analogy to that ofFIG. 5 , a further embodiment of an enlarged treatment apparatus; -
FIG. 7 in a perspective view, an apparatus according to the present invention and similar to the apparatus according to theFIGS. 3 and 4 for cassette-to-cassette substrate handling, and -
FIGS. 8 a-8 c a schematic representation of an apparatus according to the present invention for different substrate treatments and accordingly with different treatment station configurations. - In
FIG. 1 an apparatus according to the present invention is perspectively shown, most schematically and under a generic approach. Substrates (not shown inFIG. 1 ) are treated by one or more than one vacuum treatment processes within avacuum recipient 10 which is evacuatable by means of avacuum pump arrangement 3. Thevacuum recipient 10 has an interior volume i and is surrounded by its exterior e which is e.g. ambient atmosphere. Thevacuum recipient 10 has a pass-through opening in itstop wall 8 for substrates. The pass-through opening is conceived as abi-directional load lock 5 having anexternal valve plate 1 a, an internal valve (not shown in the representation ofFIG. 1 ) as clearly known to the skilled artisan and a load lock compartment 5 a. Theexternal valve plate 1 a is realized by asubstrate carrier 1 a which is provided on afirst substrate handler 1 of atransport arrangement 100 provided in the exterior e of thevacuum treatment recipient 10. Thefirst substrate handler 1 is swivelable about a first axis A1, whereby the swiveling movement is driven by afirst drive 9 which is controllable at a control input C9. Thefirst substrate handler 1 comprises twofirst substrate carriers first substrate handler 1 is controllably swiveled about axis A1, selectively one of the at least twofirst substrate carriers load lock 5, as shown inFIG. 1 the onefirst substrate carrier 1 a. - Each of the at least two
first substrate carriers load lock 5, may be moved towards thevacuum treatment recipient 10 and thus towards compartment 5 a ofload lock 5 to seal off the addressed compartment with respect to the exterior e and thus to operate as the external valve of theload lock 5. Because in the embodiment ofFIG. 1 the opening ofload lock 5 towards the exterior e is in plane with the plane wherealong thefirst substrate carrier 1 swivels, thefirst substrate carriers FIG. 1 are moveable towards and from such opening in a direction parallel to first axis A1, driven by control drives 11 a and 11 b, both being controlled via respective control inputs C11a and C11b. Thetransport arrangement 100 further comprises asecond substrate handler 20 which is swivelable about a second axis A20 by means of a second controlleddrive 21 controlled at a control input C21. Thesecond substrate handler 20 comprises at least foursecond substrate carriers 20 a to 20 d. Thesecond substrate carriers 20 a to 20 d are evenly distributed in azimutal direction α with respect to the second axis A20 about this axis A20 and are equally spaced therefrom. - In the embodiment as shown in
FIG. 1 the second axis A20 is parallel to the first axis A10 which generically is not mandatory. - Considered along their respective swiveling trajectory paths the
first substrate carriers second substrate carriers 20 a to 20 d are mutually aligned respectively in one position P1/20, in the embodiment ofFIG. 1 considered in direction of the axis A1 and A20. Whenever one of thefirst substrate carriers second substrate carriers 20 a to 20 d the other one of the twofirst substrate carriers FIG. 1 first carrier 1 a, is in alignment with theload lock 5 and establishes there for the external valve of theload lock 5. - At the references R the mechanic, customarily stationary reference system is addressed.
- The first and the
second substrate carriers FIG. 1 ) with substrate seizing or gripping and releasing arrangements, which arrangements are controlled if necessary. - Clearly, such substrate seizing or gripping and releasing arrangement is differently conceived dependent therefrom, whether at a respective substrate carrier a substrate will be suspended and thus is to be lifted and held against force of gravity or at another respective substrate carrier the substrate may rather be deposited thereon.
- By such controlled arrangements which e.g. may be electromagnetically based, magnetically based or may be realized by vacuum chucks at a respective substrate carrier a substrate may be seized from a support or released to a support.
- The apparatus as generically shown in
FIG. 1 further comprises atiming unit 25 by which all the controlled drives 11 a, 11 b, 9 and 21 as well as the (not shown) substrate seizing and releasing units at the first and/or second substrate carriers are time controlled. - As was addressed, the
load lock 5 of thevacuum recipient 10, wherein substrate vacuum treatment is performed, is conceived as a bi-directional load lock, which means substrates are transferred from the exterior e to the interior i of thevacuum treatment recipient 10 as well as vice versa from the interior i to the exterior e viaload lock 5. Further and as will be exemplified, thetransport arrangement 100 is operated by respective time sequence control of the addressed drives and seizing/releasing units as a bi-directional transport arrangement for substrates which are to be treated towards and into thevacuum recipient 10 as well as for substrates which have been treated invacuum recipient 10 towards a desired destination, generically shown at 7. - Such bi-directional transport becomes possible by the transport arrangement as generically shown in
FIG. 1 , by which in combination with the bi-directional ability ofload lock 5, considerable foot print area of the overall apparatus is saved. This due to the fact that one and the same transport arrangement acts as a transport arrangement for both, treated as well as untreated substrates. - A specific manner of time control of the
transport arrangement 100 for bi-directionality shall now be exemplified with the help ofFIGS. 2 a to 2 f. - In
FIGS. 2 a to 2 f a step sequence of substrate handling by the apparatus according toFIG. 1 is shown. Thereby, the apparatus which is shown perspectively inFIG. 1 is schematically shown inFIG. 2 a in top view, whereby the substrate carriers exemplified inFIG. 1 in square shape are shown inFIG. 2 a in circular shape. Further, it has to be noted that substrates UT not yet treated invacuum recipient 10 are addressed by one type of hatching according (UT) and substrates T having been treated invacuum recipient 10 are denoted by the other type of hatching (T). It has further to be noted that in each step representation transition of the respective substrates between first andsecond substrate carriers destination location 7 andsecond substrate carriers 20 a to 20 d as well as between an inside transport within vacuum recipient 10 (not shown inFIG. 1 ) and thefirst substrate carrier -
FIG. 2 a shows the respective swiveling directions which are assumed for the following step-by-step discussion. - To
FIG. 2 b: -
Substrate carrier 20 d has been loaded with an untreated substrate fromsource location 7. Substrate carrier (SC) 20 a is loaded with an untreated substrate. -
SC 20 b has unloaded an untreated substrate toSC 1 b. -
SC 1 a has been loaded with a treated substrate fromload lock 5. -
SC 20 c is still loaded with a treated substrate. - To
FIG. 2 c: - In transiting from the
FIG. 2 b to theFIG. 2 c representation thefirst substrate handler 1 is swiveled by 180°, whereas thesecond substrate handler 20 is kept stationary.SC 1 b has unloaded the untreated substrate to loadlock 5. The treated substrate onSC 1 a has been unloaded to SC20 b. Untreated substrates still remain on SC20 d and SC20 a, whereas SC20 c is still loaded with a treated substrate. - To
FIG. 2 d: - When transiting from the configuration according to
FIG. 2 c to the configuration according toFIG. 2 d thefirst substrate handler 1 is kept stationary, whereas thesecond substrate handler 20 is swiveled by 90°. - SC1 b is loaded from
load lock 5 by a treated substrate. SC1 a is loaded with an untreated substrate from SC20 a. SC20 c has unloaded a treated substrate todestination location 7. - SC20 d is still loaded with an untreated substrate, whereas SC20 b is still loaded with a treated substrate.
- To
FIG. 2 e: - By transiting from the configuration according to
FIG. 2 d to the configuration according toFIG. 2 e thefirst substrate handler 1 is swiveled by 180°, whereas thesecond substrate handler 20 is kept stationary. - SC1 a has unloaded the untreated substrate to load
lock 5. SC1 b has unloaded a treated substrate to SC20 a. SC20 c has been loaded by an untreated substrate fromsource destination 7. - SC20 d is still loaded with an untreated substrate, whereas SC20 b is still loaded with a treated substrate.
- To
FIG. 2 f: - When transiting from the configuration of
FIG. 2 e to the configuration ofFIG. 2 f thefirst substrate handler 1 is kept stationary, whereas thesecond substrate handler 20 is swiveled by 90°. - SC1 a is loaded from
load lock 5 with a treated substrate. - SC1 b is loaded from SC20 d with an untreated substrate. SC20 b has unloaded a treated substrate to source
destination 7. - SC20 c is still loaded with an untreated, whereas SC20 a is still loaded with a treated substrate.
- As may be seen, the configurations e.g. of
FIG. 2 c andFIG. 2 e on one hand and ofFIG. 2 d andFIG. 2 f on the other hand are identical. - It might be seen that within one working cycle consisting of subsequent swivel step of
substrate handler 1 and swivel step ofsubstrate handler 20, one treated substrate is transferred fromvacuum treatment recipient 10 to thetransport arrangement 100 and one untreated substrate is delivered from thetransport arrangement 100 to thevacuum treatment recipient 10. At the other end of thetransport arrangement 100 one untreated substrate is picked up from asource station 7 and one treated substrate is delivered toreception station 7. - By the arrangement as exemplified in
FIG. 1 there is thus achieved in a highly small footprint configuration a bi-directional substrate transport from a source of untreated substrates towards and into a vacuum treatment recipient, and from such vacuum treatment recipient towards and to a reception location for treated substrates. - With an eye on the
FIGS. 1 to 2 e it further might be seen that the principle as exemplified is not necessarily bound to the substrates being delivered to and retrieved from a vacuum recipient at its top side and by respective vertical movement of thefirst substrate carriers bi-directional load lock 5. Further, it becomes evident that the swivel axes A1 and A20 need not necessarily be vertical and need not necessarily be in parallelism, and further it becomes evident that with respect to the location of thevacuum treatment recipient 10 the twosubstrate handlers handler 20 which in fact provides for an intermediate storage location both for an untreated and for a treated substrate might be realized with more than four substrate carriers and that thefirst handler 1 as well might be realized with more than two first substrate carriers. Further, under a generic aspect it is further not mandatory that, considered in azimutal direction α inFIG. 1 , the substrate carriers as provided at bothsubstrate handlers - Nevertheless and with an eye on one object of the present invention, namely to provide an optimally small footprint, high throughput vacuum treatment apparatus, the following prevails:
-
- Providing the input/output of substrates to and from the vacuum treatment apparatus as shown in
FIG. 1 , which means at a top surface of thevacuum recipient 10 and providing a vertical transfer movement and movement of the external load lock valve significantly facilitates handling of the substrates within the treatment apparatus, as such substrates may just be deposited upon a handler within therecipient 10. - Conceiving the
first substrate handler 1 with only twosubstrate carriers load lock 5. - Further, as only two
substrate carriers first substrate handler 1, only two equipments must be provided to lift and to hold substrates against the force of gravity. - Conceiving the
second substrate handler 20 with not more than four substrate carriers ensures the intermediate storage location for just one of the untreated and of the treated substrates, which minimizes the footprint area for such handler. Providing more than the addressed foursubstrate carriers 20 a to 20 d will not improve throughput, but will—especially for large substrates—significantly increase footprint area. - Realizing the sequence of the two handlers, considered from the
vacuum treatment recipient 10 as shown inFIG. 1 , minimizes, as was addressed above, the number of substrate carriers to be additionally tailored and equipped so as to act as external load lock valves. - Thereby, that substrate handler with more than two substrate carriers additionally allows for significant simplification of substrate holding equipment upon the substrate carriers, because the substrates will be just deposited on top of the addressed carriers.
- The equal distribution of the substrate carriers along their respective swiveling paths, i.e. azimutally, significantly simplifies control of the swiveling drives 9 and 21 and the mutual arrangement of the handlers and the vacuum treatment recipient which is also valid for the arrangement as shown in
FIG. 1 for the swiveling axes A1 and A20.
- Providing the input/output of substrates to and from the vacuum treatment apparatus as shown in
- Thus, it might be seen that the embodiment as shown in
FIG. 1 is in fact highly optimized with respect to easy substrate handling, high throughput and small footprint. -
FIG. 3 shows in top view and simplified a today preferred vacuum treatment apparatus according to the invention, wherein thetransport arrangement 100 in cooperation with avacuum treatment recipient 10 as shown inFIG. 1 are exploited.FIG. 4 shows a cross-sectional representation along line IV-IV ofFIG. 3 , withouthandler 20. - Within
vacuum recipient 10 there is provided as seen inFIG. 4 atransport arrangement 30 which is swivelable about a central axis A30. Thetransport arrangement 30 is driven for its swivel movement by adrive 32 with a control input C32. As seen fromFIG. 4 in combination withFIG. 3 in this specific embodiment thetransport arrangement 30 carries along its periphery sixsubstrate carriers 34 forsubstrates 36. On top of thevacuum treatment recipient 10 there are provided six stations, five of which, 38 a to 38 e, being surface treatment stations for thesubstrates 36, one thereof being the bi-directionalload lock station 35 in analogy to loadlock 5 ofFIG. 1 . Thesurface treatment stations 38 a to 38 e may all be realized for different substrate processings or a number of these treatments stations may be conceived for equal surface processing and even all of these stations may be conceived for equal substrate surface processing. Such treatment stations may be stations for PVD surface treatment, e.g. sputtering stations for reactive or non-reactive sputtering, thereby especially magnetron sputtering, may be stations for arc evaporation coating, again reactive or non-reactive, may further be treatment stations for CVD, thereby especially for plasma-enhanced CVD, may further be etching stations, heating or cooling stations, etc. - As especially seen in
FIG. 4 therespective substrate carriers 34 reside within inner valve members, one thereof, 40 c, being shown inFIG. 4 . In positions registering with the positions of thetreatment stations 38 a to 38 e as well as with the position ofload lock 35, there are provided, mounted to thebottom wall 42 of thevacuum treatment recipient 10, cylinder/piston arrangements, respectively 44 a to 44 e and 44 35. - By means of the cylinder/piston arrangements 44, in fact double-piston arrangements, the
substrate carriers 34 and the valve members 40 may be lifted and retracted independently. Thus and with an eye onFIG. 4 , by the cylinder/piston arrangement 44 c thesubstrate carrier 34 may be lifted into treatment position forsubstrate 36 withintreatment station 38 c. Simultaneously, if needed, the processing space within thetreatment station 38 c is sealed from the remaining interior i of thevacuum treatment recipient 10 by means of lifting the valve member 40 c towards and ontowall 48 of thevacuum treatment recipient 10. - If desired for specific substrate treatment at specific treatment stations and as exemplified for the
treatment station 38 c inFIG. 4 , there is further provided a controlled rotary drive 46 c by means of which, once therespective substrate carrier 34 is brought into registering position with atreatment station 38, thesubstrate carrier 34 is rotated in its treatment position e.g. to establish uniform treatment along the surface of the substrate. - Thus, in operation the
transport arrangement 30 is stepwise rotated by respective angular steps β as shown inFIG. 3 so that after each angular swiveling step one of the valve member 40 andsubstrate carriers 34 is in registering position with one of thetreatment stations 38 andload lock 35. Then in the registering positions, seal-off of the treatment or processing atmosphere from the inside i of thevacuum treatment recipient 10 is established by lifting the valve member 40 towards and onto the inner surface of thetop wall 48 of thevacuum treatment recipient 10, thereby thesubstrate carriers 34 are lifted in respective processing positions within thetreatment stations 38. Lifting of thesubstrate carriers 34 on one hand and of valve members 40 on the other hand is performed substantially simultaneously at each of the treatment stations. - That valve member 40 which registers with the
load lock 35 acts as the inside load lock valve. Thesubstrate handler 1 with swivelingdrive 9 is conceived as was explained in context withFIG. 1 . Thereby, the drives 11 a and 11 b as shown inFIG. 1 are realized by respective cylinder/piston drives 11 a′ and 11 b′. A loadlock vacuum pump 48 is operationally connected to the load lock compartment of theload lock 35. - Further and as may be seen from
FIG. 3 thesecond substrate handler 20 is conceived as was exemplified more schematically in theFIGS. 1 to 2 f. - As may be seen from
FIGS. 2 b to 2 f occurrence of step forwards movement of thetransport arrangement 30 and occurrence of 180° swiveling steps of thefirst substrate handler 1 are in synchronism, but phase shifted by half a step repetition period. Thus, the step control clock for thetransport arrangement 30 which depends from the respective processing durations at thetreatment stations 38, governs the swiveling clock forhandler 1. - For each of the processing or treatment steps performed at the
treatment stations 38 a to 38 e an equal duration is established which accords with the duration which is necessitated to remove a treated substrate from thetransport arrangement 30 onto one of thesubstrate carriers first substrate handler 1 and additionally to apply from therespective substrate carrier handler 1 a yet untreated substrate via theload lock 35 to thesubstrate transport arrangement 30. - As may be seen from
FIG. 3 there is further provided athird substrate handler 50 in a specific embodiment of the apparatus according to the invention. Thisthird substrate handler 50, again with an eye onFIGS. 2 b to 2 f, operates as source anddestination location 7. As according to the addressedFIGS. 2 b to 2 f at thislocation 7 there is loaded an untreated substrate fromsuch location 7 and received a treated substrate there in the rhythm at whichfirst substrate handler 1 handles substrates, thehandler 50 is operated at the same step-controlling clock as thefirst substrate handler 1.Third substrate handler 50 thus removes from a respective one of thesubstrate carriers 20 a treated substrate and applies to the same an untreated substrate. Thethird substrate handler 50 is swiveled about an axis A50, preferably arranged parallel to the axes A1, A20, A30 and is conceived as a two-arm handler in analogy to thesubstrate handler 1. The controlled swiveling drive for thethird substrate handler 50 is addressed byreference number 52 inFIG. 3 with control input C52. - As further shown in
FIG. 3 there is provided a one-directional conveyor arrangement 54 with inlinesubstrate support areas 56. The one-directional conveyor 54 is stepwise moved forwards as shown by the arrow v, so that whenever asubstrate carrier third substrate handler 50 registers with one of thesubstrate carriers 20 a to 20 c of thesecond substrate handler 20, the other one of the twosubstrate carriers conveyor 54. In this position an untreated substrate arriving from Ein on asubstrate support 56 is gripped by one of thesubstrate carriers third substrate handler 50, a treated substrate is released and placed on thesubstrate support 56 which has just been freed. By a next step of the one-directional carrier 54 the treated substrate is moved in synchronism withtransport arrangement 30. - With respect to the conception of the
third substrate handler 50 with respect to geometric arrangement of its axis A50 and as a two-armed handler etc. the same advantages are achieved as were already addressed in context with the specific arrangement offirst substrate handler 1. Thesubstrate carriers third substrate handler 50 are equipped with substrate gripping members as at these substrate carriers the substrates are to be held in suspended position. - As perfectly clear to the skilled artisan principally it is possible to deliver treated substrates to a conveyor in analogy to
conveyor 54 ofFIG. 3 and to apply untreated substrates from such conveyor directly to and from thesecond substrate handler 20. Nevertheless, the three-handler concept as exemplified combined with the load lock on top of thevacuum treatment recipient 10 has the advantage that upon themulti-substrate carrier conveyor 54 substrates may just be deposited. - The apparatus as shown especially in
FIG. 3 , possibly with different types ofthird substrate handler 50 as will be addressed later, allows utmost flexible conception for more complex substrate treatment apparatus. - In the embodiment as shown in
FIG. 5 substrates are to be treated on both surfaces. To do sofirst apparatus 60 a according to the embodiment ofFIG. 3 is provided along the one-directional conveyor 54. As exemplified by the five hatched treatment stations at theapparatus 60 a the front surface of the substrates is treated by five equal or different processing or treatment steps. After the one side treated substrates are re-deposited by thethird substrate handler 50 on theconveyor 54 they are stepwise moved forwards towards aflip station 58. At thisflip station 58 the substrates are flipped so that their yet untreated surface is pointing upwards. The flipped-over substrates are then transported to asecond apparatus 60 b conceived as was explained in context withFIG. 3 . There the backside of the substrates is treated. As such backside treatment may e.g. necessitate only one surface treatment or processing step at theapparatus 60 b and as shown by respective hatching, only one of the treatment stations is operative or only one of such treatment stations is at all mounted. The substrates with surface treated backside are re-deposited upon theconveyor 54, so thatdownstream apparatus 60 b substrates are stepwise transported which are treated on both, front surface and back surface. - Clearly and still with an eye on the embodiment of
FIG. 5 one and the same surface of the substrate may be treated by totally ten processing steps, namely ofapparatus 60 a plus ofapparatus 60 b without providing the flippingstation 58. -
FIG. 6 shows a further example of flexibly combining apparatus according to the present invention to more complex multi-apparatus arrangements. With the embodiment ofFIG. 6 parallel processing of substrates is established, which leads to doubling the throughput at the output end Eout ofconveyor 54. In a first apparatus 60 c according to the invention everysecond workpiece support 56 ofconveyor 54 is emptied from an untreated substrate, and a treated substrate is re-applied to the yet emptiedworkpiece support 56. To do so theconveyor 54 is stepwise advanced by an extent according to two subsequent substrate supports 56, each time an untreated substrate has been replaced by a substrate having been treated in apparatus 60 c. Upstream a second apparatus 60 d identical to apparatus 60 c is provided along theconveyor 54. The spacing of the two apparatus 60 c and 60 d is established so that the second apparatus 60 d with itsthird substrate handler 50 d registers with an untreated substrate on theconveyor 54 when the first apparatus 60 c with itsthird substrate handler 50 c registers as well with an untreated substrate on theconveyor 54. The apparatus 60 d is thus loaded in parallel to the apparatus 60 c with an untreated substrate from thesubstrate carrier 54 and respectively re-applies a treated substrate back to the just freedsubstrate support 56 simultaneously with apparatus 60 c doing so. As theconveyor 54 is advanced at double speed the output of treated substrates at Eout is doubled due to the addressed parallel processing. - Instead of conceiving the overall apparatus for single substrate handling and thereby conveying on the
respective conveyors 54 as exemplified in theFIGS. 3 , 5 and 6 single substrates, in a further embodiment substrate handling is performed in a cassette-to-cassette technique. - According to
FIG. 7 and with an eye e.g. onFIG. 3 there is provided instead of a single-substrate transport conveyor 54 a cassette-transport conveyor 54 a wherein instead of single wafer supports 56 cassette or magazine supports 56 a are provided. Full cassettes with untreated substrates are fed in arrow direction stepwise towards unload position Pul. The cassette with untreated substrates is unloaded by means of apivot robot 58 onto thesecond substrate handler 20 and treated substrates are unloaded from thesecond substrate handler 20 and loaded in a next upstream cassette byhandler 58. Stepwise forwards movement of theconveyor 54 a is only performed after that a cassette with untreated substrates is emptied and, accordingly, the next upstream cassette is full with the respective number of treated substrates. Clearly a cassette-to-cassette handling might also be performed with an eye e.g. onFIG. 3 by means of a two-armed handler 50, thereby moving theconveyor 54 a with cassettes forth and back to subsequently empty one cassette with untreated substrates and filling the upstream neighboring cassette with treated substrates. - The apparatus according to the present invention is especially tailored today to treat substrates as silicon wafers for solar cell production. Thereby and with an eye e.g. on
FIG. 5 for depositing a layer which has triple thickness of subsequent layers, three subsequent treating stations are operated equally and such triple thickness layer is deposited in fact by subsequently depositing one third of the layer in three equally operated subsequent treating stations. Thus, with the apparatus according to the present invention substrate surface treatment may be performed highly flexibly, whereby all the treatment steps are subdivided in sub-processes of equal time duration. The addressed apparatus has a minimum footprint at optimized throughput. It has to be noted that all handling facilities are easily accessible from outside the vacuum treatment recipient, obviously with the exception of thetransport arrangement 30 within such recipient. Substrates e.g. of circular or square design may easily be treated especially of more than 200×200 mm. Clearly and with respect to the number of treatment stations as of 38 ofFIG. 3 the number of such treatment stations may be more or less than five as shown inFIG. 3 as an example. By establishing processing in sixtreatment stations 38 according toFIG. 8 a a thick layer of SiN:H may be deposited on silicon wafers by performing six times the equal layer deposition, e.g. by plasma-enhanced CVD or reactive PVD (sputtering). According to the embodiment ofFIG. 8 b a relatively thin layer of SiN:H is deposited and upon such relatively thin layer a further layer of SiN with approximately five times the thickness of the SiN:H layer. With the embodiment as schematically shown inFIG. 8 c first a relatively thin layer of SiN:H is deposited, then due to higher deposition rate, a relatively thick layer of ZnS—SiO2 followed by a relatively thick layer of SiO2 in 4 substeps. Subdividing single unitary processing steps into substeps being performed subsequently at subsequent treatment stations is clearly performed taking into consideration the respective treatment rate of the addressed processes upon the substrate surface.
Claims (13)
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US13/257,001 US8870513B2 (en) | 2009-03-18 | 2010-03-11 | Vacuum treatment apparatus |
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US16108409P | 2009-03-18 | 2009-03-18 | |
PCT/EP2010/053140 WO2010105967A2 (en) | 2009-03-18 | 2010-03-11 | Vacuum treatment apparatus |
US13/257,001 US8870513B2 (en) | 2009-03-18 | 2010-03-11 | Vacuum treatment apparatus |
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US20120003064A1 true US20120003064A1 (en) | 2012-01-05 |
US8870513B2 US8870513B2 (en) | 2014-10-28 |
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US (1) | US8870513B2 (en) |
EP (1) | EP2409317B8 (en) |
KR (4) | KR101680295B1 (en) |
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ES (1) | ES2450118T3 (en) |
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Also Published As
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KR20190111164A (en) | 2019-10-01 |
ES2450118T3 (en) | 2014-03-24 |
US8870513B2 (en) | 2014-10-28 |
WO2010105967A2 (en) | 2010-09-23 |
KR102298893B1 (en) | 2021-09-08 |
TW201113972A (en) | 2011-04-16 |
CN102356459A (en) | 2012-02-15 |
TWI553765B (en) | 2016-10-11 |
KR102103477B1 (en) | 2020-06-01 |
WO2010105967A3 (en) | 2011-05-26 |
KR20160137660A (en) | 2016-11-30 |
KR102027108B1 (en) | 2019-10-01 |
KR20110128943A (en) | 2011-11-30 |
PL2409317T3 (en) | 2014-06-30 |
MY157637A (en) | 2016-07-15 |
KR101680295B1 (en) | 2016-11-29 |
CN102356459B (en) | 2014-05-14 |
KR20200044131A (en) | 2020-04-28 |
EP2409317A2 (en) | 2012-01-25 |
EP2409317B1 (en) | 2013-12-11 |
EP2409317B8 (en) | 2014-02-19 |
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